Community, conversation and tourism: safeguarding French-speaking Red River Métis cultural heritage through hospitality design

dc.contributor.authorHince, Julie
dc.contributor.examiningcommitteeClose, Susan (Interior Design)
dc.contributor.examiningcommitteeThériault, Desirée (Narratives Inc.)
dc.contributor.supervisorShields , Jason
dc.date.accessioned2024-04-03T16:46:16Z
dc.date.available2024-04-03T16:46:16Z
dc.date.issued2024-03-25
dc.date.submitted2024-03-26T03:41:14Zen_US
dc.degree.disciplineInterior Design
dc.degree.levelMaster of Interior Design (M.I.D.)
dc.description.abstractCultural diversity plays a vital role in enriching the world, fostering curiosity, facilitating learning, promoting well-being, and driving personal development. However, the advent of modernization, prevailing trends, virtual networks, and mass tourism pose a threat to cultural diversity, eroding unique identities and local cultures. This Master of Interior Design practicum project focuses on acknowledging, safeguarding, and providing a meaningful space for the French-speaking Red River Métis Nation. The project seeks to address the question: “How can hospitality design contribute to a stronger sense of identity and spirit of place for the French-speaking Red River Métis?”. By exploring the hospitality industry and designing a cultural hub in St Boniface, including a hostel, restaurant, and gathering spaces, the project proposes repurposing the historic Kiewel Brewery building at 690 St Joseph Street, Winnipeg, as a gesture of reclamation and cultural revitalization. Utilizing methodologies including visual essays, literary analysis, precedent studies, and assessments of both site and building, the project conscientiously fosters a sense of place that embraces the surrounding community, promoting cultural understanding and appreciation. Le Fil Rouge draws inspiration from Phenomenology, and concepts such as sense of identity, spirit of place, adaptive reuse, decolonization, and sustainable tourism to showcase the value of hospitality design in fostering connections, instilling value, and immersing the community, locals, and tourists in the local culture and land. Subsequently, the research highlights the importance of decolonizing architecture and the transformative potential of hospitality design in creating spaces that honour and celebrate the cultural heritage of communities, ensuring their representation and vitality in the built environment. The project emphasizes the importance of recognizing, honouring, and preserving cultural diversity to create more inclusive, valid, and resilient societies.
dc.description.noteMay 2024
dc.description.sponsorshipAllan Waisman Indigenous Architecture Scholarship, Award Number: 45138 Frank and Marjorie Silver Bursary, Award Number: 45361 Roy C. Rettinger Graduate Scholarship, Award Number: 45516 Barbara C. Poole Bursary, Award Number: 25078 Price Industries Limited Faculty of Architecture Recruitment Award, Award Number: 45879
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1993/38145
dc.language.isoeng
dc.rightsopen accessen_US
dc.subjectRed River Métis
dc.subjectIndigenous
dc.subjectHostel
dc.subjectRestaurant
dc.subjectSt Boniface
dc.subjectAdaptive reuse
dc.subjectDecolonization
dc.subjectStorytelling
dc.subjectSense of identity
dc.subjectCultural Heritage
dc.subjectFrancophone
dc.titleCommunity, conversation and tourism: safeguarding French-speaking Red River Métis cultural heritage through hospitality design
dc.typemaster thesisen_US
local.subject.manitobayes
oaire.awardTitlePost-Secondary Education Support Program
project.funder.nameManitoba Métis Federation
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